She too broke the injunction at Kingsbury. Gwen Harrison, 44, is today in Styal prison for 7 days. It’s time to start caring again, it’s time to resist, it’s time to just stop oil” There is no future in fossil fuels, and ordinary people understand this. They’ve proved that they don’t care by protecting the fossil fuel industry. I’m doing this to highlight the fact that the council, the judiciary and the government don’t care. To resist our destructive course is an act of loving care. “I’m going to break the council injunction because this is what loving care looks like in 2022. It turns out to be a mistake, but she gets time to chat to two women who are going to court and to explain to them about the Climate and Ecological Emergency.ĭavid Nixon, 35, has been in Doncaster prison on remand since 20 th May and will be held until 31 st after having broken an injunction taken out banning any kind of protest in front of Kingsbury Oil Depot, near Tamworth. “My heart was singing and for ages after, I found myself smiling”Ģ days later she is woken at 6.30 and told she is going to court but has no knowledge of this or any idea why. On the flip side, she talks with her grandson on the phone who has just been to Peppa Pig world she says: They want to move her to a different wing, where her fellow prisoners could be child murderers and other ‘lifers’ but she’d prefer to stay where she is where the squabbles which break out are mostly around vapes. Michelle is just an ordinary person, though extraordinary in her willingness to put her freedom on the line to bring attention to the climate crisis. Will I get any family visitors this time? Breathe, Michelle. And closer to home – for a future for little Oscar, my only grandson, the son of Nathan. This time I’m not fighting to keep my baby, Nathan, but fighting for a liveable future for all humanity. “Now – here I am, I’ve sent myself away again. A brave decision without support from her parents. In a moving letter from prison this week she remembered the last time she felt so alone, when she was pregnant at 19 and had gone to a ‘home for unmarried mothers’ to have and keep her baby. Michelle Charlesworth, 56, has been in prison since May 4 th. And even the summer before she found out she had cancer, Charlesworth had the same bronzed look.Prison is not where anyone wants to be on a beautiful Spring day but increasing numbers of Just Stop Oil and Insulate Britain supporters are being imprisoned for trying to preserve a liveable planet for us all. In her high school prom picture, her skin was also gloriously tan. When she looked back to see how it happened, it wasn't hard to figure.Įvery summer, as a child, she was out in the sun, soaking in rays. "So this was not only a medical problem, it was also cosmetic," Charlesworth said. The problem was that doctors wouldn't know how much the cancer had spread until the skin was removed and tested. "A biopsy came back two days later - basal cell carcinoma," Charlesworth said. Katz got his magnifying glass out and said, "I wanted to ask you about that." Thank God she did, Charlesworth said later. A photographer she was with asked Katz about a bump on his face, and she then asked about the mark on her own. "I only ended up in a doctor's office as a reporter - not as a patient," Charlesworth said. She would have ignored the mark on her face without going to a dermatologist, if not for the assignment. Bruce Katz, working on a story about liposuction. The discovery came in February, when she was in the office of dermatologist Dr. "I thought it was a pore or something but it turns out it was cancer," said Charlesworth, a 31-year-old anchor/reporter for WABC-TV in New York. N E W Y O R K, July 18 - Television reporter Michelle Charlesworth was working on a news story when she got a lead she wasn't looking for - her own close-up look at skin cancer.
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